Tangerine Tree

Give your tangerine tree good care, and you can count on it to produce an abundance of sweet citrus fruits every year.

This perennial shrub is a mandarin orange hybrid. However, tangerine fruit is easier to peel and tastes sweeter.

Glossy green leaves cover the woody stems of this dwarf citrus tree year round. You can expect clusters of small,
white flowers to appear in winter on tangerine trees that are 3-4 years old.
Highly fragrant flowers are followed by fruit that turns from green to dark orange as it matures.

Let the sun shine in. Indoor citrus trees need as much light as you can give them. Place your plant directly
in front of a window where it will get several hours of direct sun each day. You can move it outdoors for the summer, if
you want. Help the tree to get acclimated by exposing it to more sun gradually. Be sure to bring it back indoors
before the first frost.

Pollinate your plant. A citrus tree that is grown indoors will need to be hand-pollinated to trigger
fruit production.

Use a small, dry paintbrush to dab each flower. Wiggle the brush around the center of
each flower, moving from flower to flower. This carries the pollen from male to female flowers, just like bees do it.

Harvest tangerines any time they're ripe -- probably winter through spring. Taste is the best indication of ripeness.
Cut off ripe fruit with sharp pruners to avoid tearing the branches.

Prune branches. Prune your plant back when new growth starts in spring. Pruning citrus trees' long branches will
encourage new branches to emerge from just below the cut. Cut at an angle just above a leaf node (where a leaf stem attaches to a branch).

Tangerine Tree Care Tips

Origin: Hybrid of citrus from Southeast Asia

Height: Up to 6 ft (1.8 m)

Light: Full sun. Keep in a sunny window or move outdoors for the warm months. Give the plant a
quarter turn every week to expose all sides to sunlight.

Water: Water thoroughly, allowing the surface of the soil to dry between waterings.

Humidity: Moderate humidity. Put the container on a tray of wet pebbles and mist the foliage to increase humidity.

Temperature: Average room temperatures 65-75°F/18-24°C.

Soil: Good-quality potting mix.

Fertilizer: Feed throughout the growing season with slow-release plant food. I recommend citrus tree fertilizer spikes
because it contains the micronutrients that fruit trees require for healthy growth.

Propagation: Take stem cuttings in early summer. With a sharp knife or razor blade, take 4 in (10 cm) stem tip
cuttings with at least 2-3 leaf nodes without flowers or fruit. Dip cut end in hormone rooting powder before inserting
in moist potting mix, then enclose in a plastic bag to maintain humidity. Stem cuttings will root in about 6-8 weeks.